MARCH 16, 2018, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A9
GRIMM,
continued from Page A1
busy but I like being busy.”
Along with Cinderella,
Collins plays the wicked step
mother, the two wicked step
sisters, the prince and a fl ock of
birds after all the other actors
in the play get sick with food
poisoning and one person has
to step it and do it all.
Collins decided to audi-
tion for the show, which runs
March 16-17, 23-24 at 7 p.m.
and March 18 and 25 at 2 p.m.,
at the recommendation of his
wife.
“She said 'one person play-
ing all these characters, that
sounds like you,'” Collins said.
Director Linda Baker cast
Collins right on the spot.
“His audition piece was
phenomenally brilliant so be-
fore I even left auditions I said
please be in The Spectaculathon
and I want you to play this part
and here's a script,” Baker said.
Collins said he didn't ac-
tually have a piece prepared
for the audition so instead he
delivered a version of Aesop
Fables' The Fox and the Grapes,
a story he's told to students
LATINO,
continued from Page A1
organizations, businesses and,
especially, education.
“Most of us are ex-mi-
grants who had to overcome
huge challenges to get an
education and succeed in
our professions,” Dominguez
said.
at Englewood Elementary
School every March as part of
Read Across America for 20
years since his own kids were
in kindergarten.
“I cut that down and just
did it,” Collins said.
In The Brothers Grimm Spec-
taculathon, written by Don
Zolidis, two narrators attempt
to recreate all 209 Brothers
Grimm fairy tales, ranging
from classics like Snow White
and Cinderella to more obscure
stories like The Devil's Grand-
mother and The Girl Without
Hands.
At the end is a two-minute
recap.
“Things just pop in and out,
people change roles, genders
are bent,” Baker said. “Props
are thrown on and off stage.
Sometimes somebody dies and
pops back up and is another
character. It's a roller coaster.
It's a silly, surprisingly witty
work. It gives our actors a lot
to think about and stretch.”
The two narrators, both
McNary graduates who have
been with Keizer Homegrown
since the beginning, are Allison
Reid and Anthony O'Neal.
Another McNary alum, Jeff
Minden, is co-directing the
show with Baker.
Seven other actors, Collins,
Nicholas Hikes, Dylan Mar-
ley, Braden Pippert, Rebekah
Pippert, Lauren Stenerson and
Marah Walsh have divided up
the rest of the parts.
“We opened it up a little bit.
It can be played with as few as
fi ve people but I don't know
how that would be possible,”
Baker said.
Hikes, who also graduated
from McNary, plays Rumples-
tiltskin and a prince. But his fa-
vorite part is a dwarf that plays
Snow White.
“It's way more fun that I
thought it was going to be,”
Hikes said. “I've seen versions
of the show before where it's
just not as fun as we're doing
it. There are so many kooky
costume pieces. It's just a pure
delight every time I come in
here.”
The show is Keizer Home-
grown's fi rst at its new theatre,
located at the Keizer heritage
Center, 980 Chemawa Rd.
NE.
General admission tick-
ets are $15 and can be pur-
chased at the door or online
at
brownpapertickets.com/
events/3131857.
The scholarships are in-
tended to further the mission
of the group. Current Mc-
Nary High School students
can fi nd out more about the
scholarship opportunities at
McNary's College and Ca-
reer Center. Donations to
the scholarship fund can be
dropped off at La Luz De
Valle church, 606 Dearborn
Avenue N.E. Donations can
be made to “LAC,” which
is operating under the non-
profi t designation of the
church for the time being.
The fi rst Latino Recogni-
tion Scholarship Reception
is slated for Thursday, May
10, at the Keizer Civic Cen-
ter.
“It's an opportunity to
celebrate them overcoming
challenges and socioeco-
nomic barriers to gradua-
tion,” Dominguez said.
Free concert at Keizer Stake Sunday
The Keizer Stake Choir of
the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints is hosting a
free Easter-themed concert
Sunday, May 18, at 7 p.m.
Joy in the Morning, an Easter
Fireside, will feature hymns in
the spirit of Easter as “a col-
lective testimony of the divin-
ity, the merit, and the love of
Jesus Christ and the power
of His glorious atonement
which reaches through eter-
nity to redeem us all from sin
and death.”
Refreshments and light
snack will be offered during
an after-concert reception.
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REBEL,
continued from Page A1
their constitutional rights
to freedom of speech or
expression at the schoolhouse
gate.”
The case involved students
who, in protest of the Vietnam
War, wore black armbands
to school. Five of them were
suspended for the action. The
ruling declared the singling
out and suspension of these
students for a non-disruptive
protest to be unconstitutional
in accordance with the fi rst
and fourteenth amendments.
Fortas wrote controversial
discussion may be considered
a disruption, “Any variation
from the majority's opinion
may
inspire
fear. Any
word spoken, in class, in
the lunchroom, or on the
campus, that deviates from
the views of another person
may start an argument or
cause a disturbance. But our
Constitution says we must
take this risk … and our
history says that it is this sort
of hazardous freedom – this
kind of openness – that is the
basis of our national strength
and of the independence and
vigor of Americans.”
On the subject of walkouts
specifi cally, the ACLU lawyers
stress that schools are not able
to punish protesters who miss
class any differently than other
instances of truancy would
be punished. This means
that while students can be
marked with an absence and
face the consequences of that
absence, they can not be given
blanket suspensions or other
punishments based on the
ideas or act of walking out in
protest.
Ben Wizner, ACLU’s
Speech,
Privacy,
and
Technology Project director,
said, given the amount of
advance notice for these
protests,
nonstandard
punishment
would
be
“draconian…, excessive, and
possibly illegal.”
In the talk, Wizner said,
despite their focus on rules,
“sometimes, for good reasons,
people decide to break
the rules… and in fact, the
history of social change in
our country involves people
getting together to engage in
civil disobedience.”
“Outside of school, you
enjoy the same rights to protest
and speak as anyone else,” Vera
Eidelman said, she also works
on the ACLU Speech, Privacy,
and Technology Project, said.
“It’s important to engage with
really hard issues, rather than
silencing or censoring them.”
Keizer is no stranger to
student protests. In January
2005, students held a sit-in of
McNary’s commons to stand
with teachers seeking better
pay. In May 2006, students
from McNary partook in
nationwide protests against
changes in immigration law.
Eleven years later, in 2017,
McNary students, in solidarity
with other schools around the
state, marched on the capital to
demand that an act protecting
Dreamers be passed. Most
recently,
in
November,
students went to the capital to
protest mandatory reporting
changes for the Salem-Keizer
School District, sparking a
national conversation on
school policy, consent laws,
and teen sexuality.
The ACLU’s full talk
and more information can
be found at https://goo.gl/
t87aFk. They also encourage
anyone who feels their civil
liberties have been infringed
to contact them at https://
www.aclu.org/contact-us.
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Students at Whiteaker Middle
School (above) and Claggett
Creek Middle School (right)
gather after walking out of
class.
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WorshipDirectory
These Salem-Keizer houses of
worship invite you to visit.
Call to list your church
in our Worship Directory:
(503) 390-1051
John Knox Presbyterian Church
JOIN US FOR
SUNDAY WORSHIP
452 Cummings Lane North • 393-0404
8:30 am • 10 am • 11:30 am • 6 pm
PEOPLESCHURCH
4500 LANCASTER DR NE | SALEM
503.304.4000 • www.peopleschurch.com
Father Gary L. Zerr, Pastor
Saturday Vigil Liturgy: 5:30 p.m.
Sundays: 8:15 a.m. & 10:30 a.m.
La Misa en Español: 12:30 p.m.
Celebration
Services
Faith Lutheran Church , ELCA
4505 River Road N, Keizer • 503-393-4507
www.FLCkeizer.org
Saturday Evening
6:00 pm
Pastor Linda Matz Easterling
Sunday School - 9:00 am
Worship Service -10:00 am
Children’s Programs, Student and Adult Ministries
1755 Lockhaven Dr. NE Keizer
503-390-3900
www.dayspringfellowship.com
Sunday Morning
9:00 am
and
10:45 am
www.KeizerChristian.org
Rev. Dr. John Neal, Pastor
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Education Hour - 9:15 a.m.
Nursery Care Available
www.keizerjkpres.org